Literature DB >> 20497254

Human and mouse perforin are processed in part through cleavage by the lysosomal cysteine proteinase cathepsin L.

Spela Konjar1, Vivien R Sutton, Sabine Hoves, Urška Repnik, Hideo Yagita, Thomas Reinheckel, Christoph Peters, Vito Turk, Boris Turk, Joseph A Trapani, Nataša Kopitar-Jerala.   

Abstract

The pore-forming protein perforin is synthesized as an inactive precursor in natural killer (NK) cells and cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), and becomes active when a short C-terminal peptide is cleaved within acidic lysosome-like cytotoxic granules. Although it was shown more than a decade ago that this cleavage is pH dependent and can be inhibited by the generic cysteine cathepsin inhibitor E-64d, no protease capable of processing the perforin C terminus has been identified. Neither is it known whether a single protease is responsible or the processing has inbuilt redundancy. Here, we show that incubation of human NK cells and primary antigen-restricted mouse CTLs with the cathepsin L (CatL) inhibitor L1 resulted in a marked inhibition of perforin-dependent target cell death and reduced perforin processing. In vitro, CatL preferentially cleaved a site on full-length recombinant perforin close to its C terminus. The NK cells of mice deficient in CatL showed a reduction but not a complete absence of processed perforin, indicating that cysteine proteases other than CatL are also able to process perforin. We conclude that granule-bound cathepsins are essential for processing perforin to its active form, and that CatL is an important, but not exclusive, participant in this process.
© 2010 The Authors. Immunology © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20497254      PMCID: PMC2967271          DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2567.2010.03299.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Immunology        ISSN: 0019-2805            Impact factor:   7.397


  41 in total

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4.  A common fold mediates vertebrate defense and bacterial attack.

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  23 in total

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Review 3.  Cysteine cathepsin proteases: regulators of cancer progression and therapeutic response.

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5.  Human NK cell lytic granules and regulation of their exocytosis.

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6.  A natural genetic variant of granzyme B confers lethality to a common viral infection.

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